Charles Samuel Bovy-Lysberg (Charles Lysberg) (1 May 1821 ? 14 February 1873) was a Swiss pianist and composer.
He was born in Geneva and received his early music education there. In 1835 he went to Paris, where he studied under Frédéric Chopin and met Franz Liszt. The latter was particularly supportive and helped publish Bovy-Lysberg's Les Suissesses, op. 1, a set of waltzes for piano. By mid-1840s Bovy-Lysberg was becoming a well-known teacher and performer in Paris, but after the French Revolution of 1848 he had to leave for his home town. He got married in 1848 and settled in his wife's castle in Dardagny, near Geneva. He stayed there for the rest of his life, frequently giving recitals in Geneva and the neighbouring towns, organizing concerts and publishing his music. He also taught at the Geneva Conservatory in 1848?9 and 1870?3. He composed more than 150 pieces, most of them short works for piano, very popular in Geneva salons of his time, but almost completely unknown today. A street in Geneve is named after him, rue Bovy-Lysberg. (Retracter)...(lire la suite) Source de l'extrait biographique : Wikipedia
Arrangement de Beethoven de l'Opus 61 pour piano, Opus 61a